With generous funding from alumni and parents, Bates College will add a pivotal sixth new court to the Bates Squash Center and undertake significant facility improvements, Director of Athletics Kevin McHugh announced on Sept. 22.

Two-time NESCAC Player of the Year Ahmed Abdel Khalek ’16 takes on a player from Amherst College at the Bates Squash Center. (Phyllis Graber Jensen/Bates College)

“Our squash program is among the most competitive in the country, and support from our alumni and parents will enhance the experience for our players while contributing to that excellent reputation,” said McHugh.

The squash center upgrades will be completely donor-funded, with Bates families contributing all of the $260,000 needed for the project, scheduled for completion in late October.

The addition of the sixth court, a refurbished U.S. Open Championship court from McWIL Courts whose glass walls give spectators a 360-degree view, will greatly improve the college’s ability to host tournaments, McHugh said. This significant gift will also fund a new team room and renovations to existing locker room facilities and spectator seating.

Avery and Allison Bourke, the parents of a senior squash player and lead donors to the project, emphasized the relationship between excellence in campus facilities and excellence in student performance.

“It has been said whether you think you can or whether you think you can’t, you’re right,” Avery Bourke noted. “We hope that this new court will be a showcase for Bates players who know they can.”

Trustee and fellow lead donor Christopher Gorayeb ’80 put it simply. “As alumni, we should recognize an obligation to assist Bates wherever there is a need. I am happy to do so with this project.”

Also making a significant philanthropic contribution to the project are the families of Walter and Kim Cabot P’11, P’13, P’17 and Marty and Nancy Cannon P’15.

For a program that already competes at an elite level — the women’s team was ranked 12th in the nation in 2014 and the men’s, 13th — “this gift is a game-changer,” said head coach Pat Cosquer ’97.

Cosquer said that the new court will improve tournament play at Bates considerably. Most of today’s college squash matches use a three-court system, where the No. 7, 8 and 9 matches are played on one court; 4, 5, 6 matches on a second court; and 1, 2, 3 matches on a third court. So host colleges with six courts can offer men’s and women’s matches simultaneously on three courts each.

Bates’ five-court setup, however, did not allow this efficient style of play, said Cosquer. By adding a sixth court, the squash program shortens match play by 90 minutes, giving students more time for other commitments.

“Our athletes train at a high level, but they are students first,” he said. “We’re always mindful of how much time we ask them to spend away from academics.”

The court also gives Bates the capacity to host more matches, reducing the need to travel and potentially saving the college several thousand dollars annually.

Cosquer, who currently conducts squash camps in Connecticut, Massachusetts and New Jersey, says that the new court will make it possible to host on-campus youth tournaments and camps, programs that can make valuable connections with potential Bates students.

The Bates men’s squash team capped an excellent season by going 2-1 at the College Squash Association Team Nationals last weekend at Princeton University, finishing 11th in the country with wins over Navy and Franklin & Marshall and a narrow 5-4 loss to Western Ontario, the top seed in the Hoehn Cup “B” Division in which the Bobcats were entered.

The key to the Bobcats’ success was their depth, exhibited best when they won at positions 5 through 9 in defeating F&M for 11th place, meanwhile avenging a 5-4 loss to the same opponent earlier in the season.

No Bobcat was more effective at his position than senior Marc Taggart (Skippack, Pa.), who went 3-0 on the weekend at the No. 8 position by defeating Navy’s Tommy McNamara in three games, Western Ontario’s Rafik Bhaloo in three games and, in the final match of his career, outlasting F&M’s Ben Lurio in five games.

For the season, Taggart compiled a 16-5 singles record, giving him a career mark of 50-30 over his four years as a Bobcat.

Since dropping her first two collegiate squash matches to highly ranked Cornell and Stanford, Bates first-year Mimi Neal (Danvers, Mass.) has won seven straight matches at the No. 6 position, including four last week during the Bobcat women’s squash team’s 3-1 week.

Neal, who also had a standout season on the Bates golf team in the fall, swept her opponents from Vassar, Wesleyan, Mount Holyoke and Franklin & Marshall last week, all by 3-0 scores. Dropping only three total points against Wesleyan and one against Mount Holyoke, her aggregate match score for the week was 108-3. She continued her run this week with a 3-0 win against Colby in which she again didn’t allow a single point.

Neal and the No. 12 Bates women’s squash team (4-5) play at No. 5 Yale on Saturday, then take on No. 25 Connecticut College on Sunday at Yale.

Using stick or racquet, Sarah Blomstedt '09 brings a persistence that's her birthright.

Varsity coaches tend to learn a lot about their players, so it’s not surprising that Bates field hockey coach Wynn Hohlt knew that Sarah Blomstedt ’09 had been born prematurely. But to Hohlt, it was just another detail about Blomstedt, like the fact that she grew up in Gill, Mass., and went to Loomis-Chaffee.

Then, last winter, Hohlt read Small Wonder: The Story of a Child Born Too Soon (2008, Haley’s), written by Blomstedt’s mother, Susan LaScala. In harrowing and frank detail, the book tells of Blomstedt’s fight for life during her first year. For Hohlt, learning about her player’s excruciatingly fragile beginnings 22 years ago explains the life fire that burns inside Blomstedt today.

“The book absolutely reinforced all that I know about Blommie — that being a preemie made her this tough little athlete and an achiever in whatever she’s doing,” says Hohlt.

In 1986, Susan LaScala was five months pregnant with her second child when, on Jan. 12, an infection of the membranes lining her uterine wall caused LaScala to go into premature labor. Stopping the labor would put her in danger and be fatal to the infant, so doctors performed a caesarean section. But the 25-ounce baby that emerged, LaScala writes, “did not look like a baby”:

A tiny creature lay on the open warmer….She was splayed on her back in a position that was totally unnatural for an infant. Newborns usually lie curled up in their cribs, their arms and legs remembering the way they fit in the womb. But this baby’s arms stretched flat and straight, and her legs extended and flopped to each side. She lay completely still.

It would be another month before LaScala, a nurse practitioner who is now director of clinical services at the Deerfield Academy health center, and her husband, Dr. Jeff Blomstedt, could even hold their baby. They named her Sarah Katherine Blomstedt, even though a chilling question scuttled through LaScala’s mind: Whether they should name a baby who might never know that she has a name.

Setback after obstacle followed throughout the summer: seizures, sepsis, and infections. In August, a rare yeast infection clogged both of Sarah’s kidneys, preventing her body from ridding itself of waste and putting her into pediatric intensive care for 29 desperate days. That she not only survived her first year but was left unscathed by any long-term problems, such as deafness, blindness, or cerebral palsy, is difficult even for her physician father to explain. “It’s like she’s been hardwired with true grit,” says Jeff Blomstedt.

LaScala’s first-person tale is distinguished not only by its medical detail but also by its focus on what happens when incredible emotional pressure is brought to bear on a family (the couple also has a son, Willie, who was then a toddler). LaScala chronicles her and her husband’s different but ultimately compatible ways of negotiating their differences as spouses, beleaguered parents, and insiders to their daughter’s medical care. Even today, in terms of LaScala’s book, they differ. She wrote it; he admits that he can’t bring himself to read beyond a paragraph or two.

Of course, Sarah herself has no memory of any of this. Her familiarity with her own remarkable story is a product of the narrative of those who know her, and it’s almost as if the baby in the book was someone else. “I’ve been totally healthy since then,” she says. “I get a cold probably once a year, but that’s it. I feel like I got all of my sicknesses out of me that first year.”

A fierce competitor in her two Bates sports, field hockey and squash, Sarah also stays in tune with coaches and teammates. “She’s never going to screw around when I’m explaining a drill,” says Hohlt, who is an assistant coach of women’s squash in addition to her field hockey duties. “Then she helps the kids who weren’t paying attention. She’s the one who organizes people to go to the weight room, especially someone not as motivated or comfortable going there.” This past winter, Sarah was named to the women’s squash NESCAC All-Sportsmanship team.

Studying abroad, she missed the 2007 field hockey season. But her starting position in the backfield is secure thanks to her performance in the last game o f her sophomore season. After a Colby standout had a hand in back-to-back goals, the Mules were ahead 2-1 in the second half. Tapped by Hohlt to harness the offending Mule, the 5-foot-3 Blomstedt shut down her opponent the rest of the game, which Bates won in overtime.

At the time, Sarah had only played about a dozen minutes all year. “In the most important game of the season, I asked her to do something that people who were supposedly better than her couldn’t do,” says Hohlt. “And she did it.”

When home, Sarah trains and plays squash with her father. “She hasn’t beaten me in a full match yet, but she’s getting doggone close,” says Blomstedt, an accomplished player. “She tries to make me run all over the court and get me out of position. I can hear her giggle when she does that.”

Sarah employs much the same strategy at Bates (without the giggles). She’s missed only one squash match in her three years, earning a career record of 44-26 for a team that’s been in the top 15 nationally the last three years.

“I work really hard in sports and don’t give up, ever. In school I’m the same way,” says Sarah, a psychology major. “I’ve always been persistent.”

In a sense, Sarah Blomstedt has been her mother’s supportive teammate, too, as LaScala worked on her book for a decade. “I’m just thrilled for my mom that she’s finally done with the book,” says Sarah. “She made it happen.”

The Bates College men’s squash team completed its streak through the Hoehn (B) Division of the Men’s Team Nationals on Sunday at Harvard University with a 6-3 defeat of the University of Rochester. The Bobcats finish the 2008 season with a 14-4 team record, their first Hoehn Cup and the No. 9 ranking in the College Squash Association, the program’s highest final national ranking.

Also on Sunday, Bates senior and three-time All-American Ricky Weisskopf (San Salvador, El Salvador) was presented with the Skillman Award, the highest honor in college squash. The Skillman Award is described on the CSA website as “the most complete male player award,” while an article in the Stanford Daily from 2004 reads that the Skillman “goes to the senior who demonstrates great ability and does the most for the sport.” Weisskopf amassed a record of 15-3 while facing each team’s top player for the fourth straight year at Bates. Two of his losses were later avenged in rematches with the same opponents during Team Nationals.

Weisskopf set the tone Sunday in the Hoehn Cup final by defeating Rochester first-year phenom Hameed Ahmed, the No. 7 player in the CSA player rankings, in straight games. In doing so Weisskopf, the No. 10 ranked player by CSA, avenged a rare 3-0 loss to Ahmed in January.

Rochester won at the next three positions, but Bates’ depth prevailed in positions 5 through 9 for the thrilling victory. First-year Bobcats Matt Marchisotto (New York, N.Y.), Will Katz (Bronxville, N.Y.) and Nick Echeverria (Washington, D.C.) won at Nos. 5 through 7, respectively, and juniors Chip Russell (West Hartford, Conn.) and Deacon Chapin (Cambridge, Mass.) picked up crucial points at 8 and 9 to preserve the historic win.

The win completes a convincing run through the Hoehn draw for Bates, which started with a 9-0 rout of No. 15 Brown, followed by 6-3 wins over No. 11 Cornell and No. 9 Rochester.

Bates men’s and women’s squash will play at the CSA Individual Nationals in two weeks at the U.S. Naval Academy. This weekend, the Bates women’s squash team heads to CSA Team Nationals at Princeton University.

Athletic teams at Bates are on a brief hiatus for exams this week. Contests will resume on Jan. 3 with the women’s basketball team heading to Williamstown, Mass., for the Williams Tournament. But it’s been a tremendous first month of the winter sports season for the Bobcats, with several teams earning national recognition.

The women’s basketball team remains perfect through eight games this season, moving up to 16th in the D3hoops.com national poll on Tuesday. Olivia Zurek ’05 (Arlington, Mass.) scored her 1,000th career point in the team’s 61-37 win over the University of Southern Maine, ranked second nationally at the time.

The men’s basketball team has also gotten off to a hot start, posting a 9-1 record at the break. The Bobcats are the top-ranked team in Maine, and Brian Gerrity ’05 (Augusta, Maine) scored his 1000th career point in a win over Husson on Saturday.

Kelly Godsey ’06 (Parker, Colo.) opened the indoor track season with an impressive performance in the 20-lb. weight throw, breaking her own school record by three feet and one inch with an automatic national qualifying distance of 63-feet, 0.25-inches. Godsey posted a provisional qualifier in the shot put with a throw of 44-7.5. Scott Cooper ’05 (Sherman Oaks, Calif.) and Dustin Gauthier ’05 (Amherst, N.H) also hit provisional qualifiers in the 35-lb. weight throw to lead the men’s track and field team.

Both squash teams are ranked in the top 10 nationally after a solid start to the season. The women are ranked ninth and have a 5-1 record, sweeping four teams at the Wesleyan round robin by 9-0 scores. Gary Kan ’07 (Hong Kong) is ranked 44th as an individual to lead the men’s team, which is ranked 10th at 3-1.

Both swim teams have started the season 1-1, with two members of the women’s team hitting NCAA qualifiers. Kara Seaton ’05 (Wayne, Pa.) qualified for the 1-meter diving event with a score of 265.80, while Vanessa Williamson ’05 (Auburn, Maine) qualified provisionally for the 200 butterfly with a time of 2:08.26.

While the ski teams have been training for the last several weeks, the EISA schedule doesn’t begin until January. The Nordic team begins on Jan. 14 at the St. Michael’s Carnival, while the alpine season begins on Jan. 21 when Bates hosts a carnival at Sunday River and Black Mountain.